In 1990, Harvard Professor Joseph S Nye, called such an approach to building up support as the use of “soft power”. The aim of “soft power” is to create, in another country, a favourable impression of the “power” in question, modifying the impact of military or economic might.

Soft power involves the use of non-coercive means such as economic and technical aid, education, culture and communication.

Educational institutions are key instruments of soft power. Following the example of the Soviet Union and Russia, resurgent China, aiming to be respected in the world as a benign and responsible power in the face of Western sceptical propaganda, is using its gargantuan educational facilities to recruit, and perhaps influence, foreign students from across the world, especially those in its backyard and on the Belt and Road path girdling the earth.

In 2014, Chinese President Xi Jinping gave a boost to this movement when he said: “We should increase China’s soft power, give a good Chinese narrative, and better communicate China’s message to the world.”

To familiarise foreigners with Chinese thought and culture, China opened the first Confucius Institute (CI) in 2004. And by January 2018, there were more than 500 CIs across the world, including one in Colombo University. The CI is a nonprofit organisation. It also provides Mandarin language courses, cooking and calligraphy classes.

MOUNTING FOREIGN STUDENT POPULATION

Chinese official statistics show that in 2017 foreign students were studying in 935 Chinese higher education institutions located in 31 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities. These included 75,800 graduate and doctoral students, an increase of 18.62% compared with 2016.

Last year, 489,200 foreign students were studying in China, marking an increase of over 10% for the second consecutive year. The number of degree students reached 241,500 (49.38% of the total), up 15.04% year on year. A growing number of foreign students have been going for a Master’s or PhD across a widening range of disciplines.

By 2017 end, China was the most popular destination for international students in Asia. Most students came from South Korea, Thailand, Pakistan, the US, India, Russia, Japan, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, and Laos in that order.

The number of students from ‘Belt and Road’ countries accounted for 64.85% of all international students in China. In absolute numbers they were 317,200. This was an increase of 11.58% over the earlier year.

The above statistics is significant because China’s Belt and Road infrastructure projects in various parts of the world are creating jobs for students with knowledge of the Chinese language or students who had studied in China. Students are now enthused to study Chinese and in China because of this.

REASONABLE COST

The high fees charged by profit-making Western universities are a deterrent to students from developing countries. But Chinese universities, being mostly State-owned, do not lay stress on making money and are eminently affordable.

The average tuition fees in public universities in China range from $3,300 to $10,000 per year. Fees for an English-medium degree course are from $2,200 to $4,500 per year. On an average, foreign students spend around $4,000 for accommodation and about $2,000 for other living needs per year.

There are American and British universities with a campus in China. But these are costly. Tuition fees here start from $8,000 and go to $15,000 a year. A few like Beijing University charge $17,000 a year.

An MBBS student’s total expense (including living expenses) per year in China is $7,500. But in the In the UK it would be $30,500 and in the United States, $35,000. Even Indian private college charge more – $14,700 a year.

ROLE OF SCHOLARSHIPS

Scholarships offered by the Chinese government have allowed an increasing number of foreign students to pursue higher education in China.

Last year, 58,600 foreign students from 180 countries were awarded Chinese government scholarships, accounting for 11.97% of the total; 88.02% of the recipients were degree students (51,600); 69.57% (40,800) were post-graduate or doctoral students, marking an increase of 20.06% compared with 2016. However the number of self-funded students was 430,600, accounting for 88.03% of all overseas students.

As many as 48.45% of foreign students were enrolled for liberal arts degrees. Those majoring in engineering, management, science, art and agronomy increased by 20% year on year.

Liu Dong, Director of the Cultural Section in the Chinese Embassy in Colombo, said that that the Chinese government offers Sri Lankans, 80 scholarships in addition to many other full or partial scholarships offered by the Confucius Institute and Chinese provincial governments.

Qin Ping, Deputy Party Secretary of the Working Committee of Higher Education Institutions of the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, said that over the past five years, the number of international students in Guangxi has grown at an annual rate of 20 percent.

In 2017, more than 14,000 international students from 118 countries were studying in Guangxi, among which more than 12,000 students were from Asia. The number of Sri Lankan students going to Guangxi has gone up to 100 from 35 in 2012.

In a hard sell, the stalls at the Guangxi exhibition were staffed by smiling and communicative Chinese youth, eager to answer questions put by the students. The well-lit displays showed beautiful campuses set in verdant surroundings.

Besides beating the drum about the high quality of education the institutions offer and that at an affordable price, the brochures made it a point to say that the campuses provide foreign students with good living conditions, thus addressing a major concern of students from developing countries who are unfamiliar with China.

MEETS A FELT NEED

The response from Sri Lankan students was good because there is a tremendous shortage of institutions of higher learning in the island. As the Additional Secretary of the Higher Education Minister Madhawa Dewasurendra said, Sri Lankan students who qualify for university admission far outnumber available seats.

Those who fail to make it to the university either opt out of higher learning or go for expensive degrees and diplomas offered by teaching shops which prepare students for exams conducted by Western Universities and colleges of varying quality and credibility.

HAS CHINA’S BID BEEN EFFECTIVE?

Natalie Hong’s 2014 study of EU-China education diplomacy found that 50% returned from China with a positive impression, while around 40% returned with an unchanged impression.

The score would improve if the Chinese mix with the foreigners more, giving up their insularity and prejudices and also learn to speak English.

David Shambaugh, writing in Foreign Affairs in 2015 said that China’s tightening authoritarian political system was the biggest obstacle to the positive image the country.

“So long as China’s political system does not enable free human development, its propaganda efforts will face an uphill battle,” Shambaugh wrote.(newsin.asia)

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